|
|
|
|
|
by vidarh
206 days ago
|
|
To make a universal Turing machine out of an LLM only requires a loop and the ability to make a model that will look up a 2x3 matrix of operations based on context and output operations to the context on the basis of them (the smallest Turing machine has 2 states and 3 symbols or the inverse). So, yes, you can. Once you have a (2,3) Turing machine, you can from that build a model that models any larger Turing machine - it's just a question of allowing it enough computation and enough layers. It is not guaranteed that any specific architecture can do it efficiently, but that is entirely besides the point. |
|